警卫室
脱落酸
生物
突变体
植物
拟南芥
生物物理学
细胞生物学
相对湿度
生物化学
基因
物理
热力学
作者
Hubert Bauer,Peter Ache,Silke Lautner,Joerg Fromm,Wolfram Hartung,Khaled A. S. Al‐Rasheid,Sophia Sonnewald,Uwe Sonnewald,Susanne Kneitz,Nicole Lachmann,Ralf R. Mendel,Florian Bittner,Alistair M. Hetherington,Rainer Hedrich
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2012.11.022
摘要
Stomata are pores on the leaf surface, bounded by two guard cells, which control the uptake of CO2 for photosynthesis and the concomitant loss of water vapor. In 1898, Francis Darwin [1Darwin F. Observations on stomata.Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 1898; 190: 531-621Crossref Google Scholar] showed that stomata close in response to reduced atmospheric relative humidity (rh); however, our understanding of the signaling pathway responsible for coupling changes in rh to alterations in stomatal aperture is fragmentary. The results presented here highlight the primacy of abscisic acid (ABA) in the stomatal response to drying air. We show that guard cells possess the entire ABA biosynthesis pathway and that it appears upregulated by positive feedback by ABA. When wild-type Arabidopsis and the ABA-deficient mutant aba3-1 were exposed to reductions in rh, the aba3-1 mutant wilted, whereas the wild-type did not. However, when aba3-1 plants, in which ABA synthesis had been specifically rescued in guard cells, were challenged with dry air, they did not wilt. These data indicate that guard cell-autonomous ABA synthesis is required for and is sufficient for stomatal closure in response to low rh. Guard cell-autonomous ABA synthesis allows the plant to tailor leaf gas exchange exquisitely to suit the prevailing environmental conditions.
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